Showing posts with label ana mia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ana mia. Show all posts

Recovery Inspiration: I Choose Recovery


















I choose recovery because I'm worth it!


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Recovery Quote Of The Week: September 12, 2012


We need to find the courage to say NO to the things and people that are not serving us if we want to rediscover ourselves and live our lives with authenticity. "
Barbara De Angelis




original picsource: http://www.flickr.com/photos/jinx1380/4983207375/
By NMR Photo

Recovery: Is What's Holding You Back Worth Holding On To?


Past experiences, and the emotions that accompany them, all serve a purpose. We learn by doing, observing, and by making mistakes. We file those lessons away for future reference and we draw upon them to help us navigate the present. There's nothing wrong with this process unless, that is, it becomes the most used (if not only) navigation tool we possess. We, and the world around us, are in constant change. Even the tiniest deviation from the circumstances in which we found ourselves previously will have an influence on the outcome today.

For an example, when you were a child you were taught that fire burns. It's dangerous. You were told not to touch it because it will hurt you. That lesson is still with you as an adult but now you know how to use fire to your advantage. You had to adjust the lesson of your past in order to use fire safely to light a candle, to cook, to warm yourself by.

But what if you only held on to the first lesson learned and didn't deviate from it over the years? How different would your life be?

When we don't update the lessons of our past, we hinder the progress of our present. We create a wall of fear and self-doubt. The past becomes a proverbial prison, holding us back from moving forward and living and enjoying our lives as we are meant to.

The same holds true for how we define ourselves. What happened in the past is not our permanent definition. It's not a gauge for what is possible in the present. Who we were then does not determine who we are now.

Do you hold yourself in constant accountability for the mistakes you made as a young child and allow them to decide who you are today? Of course not, because we understand that those mistakes were made because we didn't know any better, we were learning, and we had some growing up to do. Despite what we may think, this is true no matter what our age. We are constantly learning and growing along the way, even if we don't realize it. Because of this, it's nearly impossible to be who you used to be. There are just too many variables.

When self is constantly confined and defined by the past there is no forward movement, no progress.  Past lessons no longer serve the purpose they are intended to but, instead, hold us captive. This is why it is so important to examine what we're holding on to, to be sure that it's not holding us back from the life we are deserving of.

Letting go of what's holding you back takes self-examination, patience and forgiveness.

Ask yourself if what you're holding on to is:
  • relevant in your life today
  • outdated thoughts/beliefs
  • positive and supportive
  • keeping you from being yourself
  • keeping you from moving foward
  • detrimental to how you feel about yourself
  • causing you anxiety, fear, shame, or guilt
  • causing feelings of inadequacy
  • making you feel undeserving of love, success, happiness,  or joy

If you find that your answers are mostly negative, it's time for some updating and clearing out.

It's okay to let go of those lessons that are no longer pertinent to the life you desire and deserve. Just because they served their purpose then, doesn't mean that they still do. No matter what the past holds, you are who you decide to be today. The life you desire for yourself is achieved one thought, one belief, one small change at a time. 




picsource:http://www.flickr.com/photos/nicolopaternoster/4603639412/

Recovery Quote Of The Week: August 24 2012


In life one has a choice to take one of two paths: to wait for some special day - or to celebrate each special day.
Rasheed Ogunlaru

See sidebar menu for more Recovery Quotes of the Week, Recovery Inspiration, and Inspirational Recovery Quotes


pic source:http://www.flickr.com/photos/30797387@N04/4906751350/

Recovery: What Are You Afraid Of?

Does the thought of recovery fill you with fear?
If so, you are not alone. It's really quite common to feel this way.

Why, when we know something is good for us, do we feel afraid of it? 

The reasons vary. Individual experiences come into play. Reasons can range from simple to complicated, making it difficult to narrow it down to one, simple answer. When an eating disorder is also part of the equation, the whys can become even more complicated. Change and control, though, are major factors for almost everyone.

Change is scary. You're taking a risk. You're leaving behind familiar territory for the unknown. There's comfort in the familiar, even when the familiar is a horrible place to be, because you know it well. The ins, the outs, the lows, the highs ... there's not much that can surprise you, not much to catch you off guard and throw you off kilter.

Fear of losing what little control you have can be scary, too. How can you control the unknown? You may have mastered controlling and navigating your current situation so well that the thought of relinquishing that control may feel too scary to even contemplate. But...

You must surrender your fears.

It's not easy to let go, even when what we're holding on to is what we most need to let go of. But, letting go is necessary to achieve change and change is necessary to achieve recovery. We have to be willing to venture out of our comfort zone and let go of what currently is, in order to begin creating what can be.
  
"The only way out is through."
  
So how do you let go despite the fear? 

With practice and patience. Acknowledge your fear. Recognize it for what it truly is, and then move forward regardless. Each time you deny your fear the chance to be in charge you gain confidence and courage, making the next time a little bit easier. Soon, what you once thought impossible, becomes reality.

You must do the thing you think you cannot do.   
Eleanor Roosevelt

Here are some suggestions and links to help with the process:
  • Keep your thoughts and words positive. Use positive, encouraging self-talk.
  • Visualize the change you desire in a positive light.
  • Believe in your ability to overcome your fears, to change, and to recover.
  • Have faith. 
  • Make a 2 column list. On one side list what you're afraid of, the other side list why that fear is invalid (or how to let it go).
  • Seek reinforcements (counseling, mentoring, organizations, people in recovery, supportive family and friends, recovery sites and forums)
  • Stay honest with yourself and others. 
  • Be kind and patient with yourself. Change takes time. Recovery takes time.
  • Get involved in something creative (writing, sketching, dance, doodling, painting, crafts,...). It gives you something positive to put your energy into and is a great outlet for stress and anxiety. 
  • Remember the recovery sayings; "Fake it 'til you make it," and "Act as if". Doing this gives you a taste of what it feels like to achieve the change you're seeking. It sets your mind on track. (It doesn't mean to lie to yourself, or others, in an attempt to deceive)
  • Journal.
  • Use affirmations throughout the day and at bedtime.
  • Choose a mantra to say to yourself whenever you're feeling less than brave (example: I am not my fear. I am capable of moving past these feelings. I can accomplish anything I set my mind to. I believe in myself). Repeat, repeat, repeat.
  • Surround yourself with positive influences. 
  • Create a recovery sound track of music that makes you feel good. 
  • Create a recovery feel good image file. Fill it with things that make you feel good, strong, serene. (Do not use anything that relates to the body, weight, or appearance in any way). 
  • Take care of yourself every day.
  • Create a Relapse Prevention Plan
  •  Give yourself credit when you make even the smallest progress. Each positive step is a victory. Celebrate it!
  • When you feel overwhelmed, turn it over to your higher power. 
     Recovery Is Possible! You are capable, worthy, and deserving of it!


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    Recovery Quote of the Week: July 31, 2012























    Life's like a piano. The white keys represent happiness, and the black keys show sadness. But as you go through your life’s journey, remember that the black keys make music too.
    Anonymous


    picsource:http://www.flickr.com/photos/sir_leif/2928070249/

    Recovery Quote of the Week: July 11, 2012























    Every passing minute is another chance to turn it all around.
    Cameron Crowe



    See sidebar menu for more Recovery Quotes of the Week and Inspirational Recovery Quotes


    picsource: http://www.flickr.com/photos/jinterwas/5281274624/

    Recovery Quote of the Week: June 30, 2012














    You must dive the depths in order to experience the beauty of what exists below the surface.
    Mrs.M

    See sidebar menu for more Recovery Quotes of the Week and Inspirational Recovery Quotes. 


    picsource:http://www.flickr.com/photos/thomashawk/5066573760/

    Eating Disorders News and Views: June 22, 2012


















    Sober Days: Anorexia, alcoholism linked?
    my desert

    Question: I have been in recovery with A.A. for 3½ years; I am also anorexic. Is there a connection between alcoholism and anorexia/bulimia?

    answer: There is evidence of a relationship between eating disorders and alcohol abuse in women.

    A study of two populations of adult women — those presenting for alcoholism treatment and those
    Read Sober Days in full


    Why women who starve themselves MUST be force-fed: Liz Jones backs the judge who ruled an anorexic girl must be kept alive against her will
    the daily mail

    Sitting at my kitchen table with a piece of toast in front of me, I feel stressed, tired and unhappy, so I don’t want to eat it.

    I have to eat it, because if I don’t, I’ll be ill. I put it in my mouth. I want to gag, but I chew. I swallow hard. It’s a tiny square of wholemeal bread. I give the crust to my dog.

    I force-feed myself — not every day, but often, when life becomes too much to bear. It’s hard, but it saves my life.

    A debate is raging about whether Mr Justice Peter Jackson was right to order an anorexic 32-year-old woman in Wales to be force-fed to keep her alive — against not just her wishes, but those of her parents.
    Read Starve in full


    Should Anorexics Be Force-Fed?
    the huffington post

    Should Anorexics be force fed? The latest legal ruling could kill the patient - but doing nothing might also condemn her to death.

    The Daily Telegraph has reported that a leading judge who sits in the Court of Protection, Mr Justice Peter Jackson, has ruled that a former medical student suffering from severe anorexia nervosa, and who is at a life-threatening low weight, should be force-fed against her wishes by doctors.
    Read Force Fed in full


    Coroner blames fashion industry for bulimic schoolgirl's death
    itv news

    The fashion industry was squarely blamed by a coroner today for the death of a schoolgirl who was found hanged after suffering from an eating disorder.

    Michael Rose, the West Somerset Coroner, called on magazines and catwalks to stop using thin models after Fiona Geraghty was found dead at her home, near Taunton, last year.

    The 14-year-old schoolgirl, who had been suffering from bulimia, hanged herself in her bedroom in July last year. She had confided in health staff that she had been taunted by other girls at her public school because of her weight.
    Read Blames in full


    Eating Disorders in Women Over 50
    Survey Shows Women in Their 50s Binge, Purge, and Diet Nearly as Often as Adolescents
    Web MD

    Eating disorders don't just strike teens. A new survey shows that middle-aged women binge, purge, and engage in extreme exercise and dieting about as often as adolescents do.

    "Strikingly, things are as bad in this age group as they are in the younger age groups. I was sort of gobsmacked that 8% reported purging in the last five years," says researcher Cynthia M. Bulik, PhD, director of the University of North Carolina Eating Disorders Program, in Chapel Hill.
    Read Women in their 50s in full


    New Research Strategy for Binge Eating
    psych central

    Researchers have discovered that blocking the Sigma-1 receptor, a cellular protein, reduced binge eating and caused binge eaters to eat more slowly.

    Binge eating disorder affects 15 million Americans and is believed to be the eating disorder that most closely resembles substance abuse and dependency.

    Binge eaters typically gorge on junk foods excessively and compulsively despite knowing the adverse consequences, which are physical, emotional and social in nature.
    Read New Strategy in full



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    Recovery Inspiration: Courage is...

    Courage is having faith despite overwhelming odds, believing in yourself when all others have lost hope, and loving yourself no matter what.
    MrsM

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    Recovery Inspiration: Never Stop Fighting. Never Lose Faith























    No one is ever too broken, too scarred, or too far-gone to create change.
    Never Stop Fighting. Never lose faith.
    MrsM



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    Father's Day: Eating Disorder Links For Dads





















    Happy Father's Day!

    Are you a father who has a child with an eating disorder? 

    Helpful Eating Disorder Links For Fathers

    What Father's Should Know About Eating Disorders


    What Parents Can Do

    More Info For Parents

    Eating Disorder Websites, Organizations, and Hotlines

    Mental Health Websites, Organization, and Hotlines



    Picsource:http://www.flickr.com/photos/lostcontrol/4226629340/in/photostream/

    Eating Disorders News and Views: May 18, 2012















      Eating Disorders in Men: An Interview With Dr. Roberto Olivardia
    Huff Post Healthy Living

    Dr. Roberto Olivardia is a clinical instructor of psychology at Harvard Medical School and assistant psychologist at McLean Hospital in Belmont, Mass. He maintains a private psychotherapy practice in Arlington, Mass., where he specializes in the treatment of body dysmorphic disorder (BDD), attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and compulsive skin-picking. He also specializes in the treatment of eating disorders in boys and men. Dr. Olivardia is a co-author of The Adonis Complex, a book which details the various manifestations of body image problems in men, including eating disorders, BDD, steroid use, and cosmetic surgery.

    What inspired you to specialize in eating disorders in men?
    Read EDs In Men in full.


    Brain Reward Systems Of Obese Women Different From Those Of Women With Anorexia: Study
    Huffington Post

    The brain reward systems of women with anorexia may work differently from those of women who are obese, a new study suggests.

    Researchers from the University of Colorado School of Medicine found that women who are anorexic have sensitized brain reward circuits, while women who are obese have desensitized brain reward circuits.
    Read Brain Reward System in full.


    Tyra Banks applauds Vogue decision to nix too-thin models; Mag to ban models under 16 who appear to have eating disorders
    Daily News

    The model turned talk-show host is praising Vogue magazine for its recent pledge to stop using too skinny models or girls who appear to suffering from an eating disorder.

    The fashion tome will reportedly no longer feature models under the age of 16.

    Banks called Vogue’s decision “the beginning of something huge."

    In an open letter to The Daily Beast, Banks talked about her own struggles to keep her weight down to a size 4 and the unhealthy things women did to keep thin.
    Read Tyra Banks in full.


    Is your daughter or son trying to hide anorexia?
    The Mirror

    When a child or teenager feels they’re being controlled by the people around them, they use anorexia to seize control back.

    I was deeply saddened recently to read that anorexia had claimed the life of Charlotte Seddon, a lovely girl of 17 and a star student who had everything to live for.

    Yes, it’s a salutary story. She first stopped eating when she was 12.

    Like many anorexics, she was bright and devious enough to fool her parents that she was eating (despite profound weight loss).

    Anorexics cleverly cover their tracks spreading crumbs, leaving buttery knives on the table, false traces of toast uneaten and consigned to the bin when no one is looking.
    Read Hiding in full.


    Dukan Diet guru struck off medical register after saying children who lose weight should be given extra marks at school
    Daily Mail

    A diet guru whose fans include the Duchess of Cambridge's mother has been struck off the medical register in France after being accused of misadvising teenagers.

    Pierre Dukan, 70, asked to be removed from the doctors’ list at his own request because he was facing disciplinary action.

    The nutritionist had used a book to propose ideal weights for 17 and 18 year-old school pupils, giving them extra exam marks if they kept to them.
    Read Diet Guru in full.


    Bournemouth charity I*Eat bridges anorexia divide
    BBC News Dorset

    There are more than 200 new cases of anorexia and bulimia in Dorset every year. The youngest patient in the county is just 10 years old.

    But this could be just the tip of the iceberg.

    Health professionals estimate there could be as many as 1,500 people with eating disorders in the county, many of whom do not come forward for fear of becoming stigmatised.

    I*Eat in Bournemouth is a charity that aims to bridge the gap and help vulnerable people get their lives back on track - people like Vicky Field.
    Read I*Eat in full. 
    Find I*Eat Org here. 


    Birmingham TB victim Alina Sarag 'given bulimia warning'
    BBC News Birmingham & Black Country

    A 15-year-old girl died of tuberculosis (TB) after being told she may have bulimia during appointments with health professionals, an inquest has heard.

    A GP allegedly advised Alina Sarag, who attended Birmingham's Golden Hillock School, that her physical deterioration was due to mental health problems.

    Alina was treated for TB after being diagnosed with the disease in 2009, Birmingham Coroner's Court heard.

    She appeared to recover from the condition, but died in January 2011.
    Read TB Victim in full.


    Healthbeat Report: Uncontrollable Overeating
    ABC News

    When healthcare professionals diagnose mental illness, they usually turn to the diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders or DSM. This so-called bible of psychiatry is undergoing a major and somewhat controversial overhaul. Already under the category of eating disorders are anorexia and bulimia. Now something called binge eating disorder may join the list as its own diagnosis.

    So when is eating too much a true illness? Experts say there are telling signs.

    The stories of binge eating patients are similar. Embarrassed, ashamed, they would eat at times till it hurt.
    Read Uncontrollable Overeating in full.


    Mirror, mirror: Palo Alto JCC event looks at media’s role in negative body image

    J.Weekly

    Sydney Calander is so accustomed to hearing her women friends tear down their own appearances that she hardly notices it anymore.

    “Honestly? It’s been like that ever since I can remember,” says Calander, 20, a junior at Pitzer College in Southern California. “Around the time I turned 12 or so, I became aware of all my friends getting really critical about their bodies, the way they looked — how they felt they had to look in order to be loved, or to attract a partner.”

    As a student at San Francisco’s Jewish Community High School of the Bay, Calander made sure not to let her own similar thoughts spiral into negative behavior.
    Read Negative Body Image in full. 


    Could airbrushing ban curb desire to be thin?
    Express and Star

    We have a love-hate relationship with food – and both extremes of consumption come with a massive health warning.

    A young woman who almost died in a four-year battle with anorexia that plunged her weight to four and a half stone has now launched a campaign to ban airbrushed images showing super-slim celebrities in glossy magazines.

    Rachael Johnston, who is now aged 20 and a “healthy” size eight, wants children to be protected from the kind of images she says led to her eating disorder.

    On the one hand, we want to stop the obesity epidemic that is making many of us – and our children – so unhealthy.

    But on the other we don’t want to drive youngsters to extreme dieting.
    Read Airbrushing in full. 


    Diagnosing a public health problem: Photoshop
    Philly.com

    Why is it that the fatter America gets, the more unrealistically thin our ideal of what people should look like becomes? It's not just a perplexing paradox. It poses a threat to the public’s health: our nation’s obesity crisis may eventually be coupled with anorexia and bulimia crises as well.

    As noted in my post last week, America is in the midst of an obesity era. Thirty-seven percent of adults and 17 percent of kids are obese, and no one is particularly happy about it. All the while, Americans are bombarded with digitally manipulated (a.k.a. “photoshopped”) images of models that are impossibly thin and blemish free.

    As highlighted by recent stories by the New York Times and BBC, young women in the U.S. and abroad have began to protest the photoshopped female form and the notion that they should strive for a body that — by virtue of skeletal constraints — is literally unobtainable.
    Read Photoshop in full.


    Eating disorders increase risk of dying prematurely, large study shows
    Examiner

    A disease of vanity? Think again. Although this stereotype of eating disorders continues among the public and even some mental health professionals, new research confirms that eating disorders are serious —and lethal. Jaana T. Suokas, MD., presented findings from a new, large scale study at the prestigious American Psychiatric Association Conference held in Philadelphia yesterday.
    Read Increased Risk in full.


    Research Study for Moms of Anorexic Boys

    Laura's Soap Box

    Are you the Mother of a Son who has received inpatient treatment for Anorexia Nervosa?

    If so, please consider participating in this important study, which seeks to explore and document the psychological and social caregiving experiences of these mothers.
    To date, there have not been any published research studies that have focused exclusively on parents of sons with anorexia.
    Read Research Study in full.


    all sources linked above

    Be Yourself: Inspirational Recovery Quotes























    To thine own self be true.
    Shakespeare

    You have to leave the city of your comfort and go into the wilderness of your intuition. What you'll discover will be wonderful. What you'll discover will be yourself.
    Alan Alda

    The hardest challenge is to be yourself in a world where everyone is trying to make you be somebody else.
    E. E. Cummings

    Always be a first-rate version of yourself, instead of a second-rate version of somebody else.
    Judy Garland

    You must have control of the authorship of your own destiny. The pen that writes your life story must be held in your own hand.
    Irene C. Kassorla

    I will not let anyone walk through my mind with their dirty feet.
    Mahatma Gandhi

    The boughs of no two trees ever have the same arrangement. Nature always produces individuals; She never produces classes.
    Lydia Maria Child

    There is just one life for each of us: our own.
    Euripides

    Be yourself. Everyone else is already taken.
    Unknown

    If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away.
    Henry David Thoreau

    Is life not a hundred times too short for us to stifle ourselves.
    Friedrich Nietzsche

    Why are you trying so hard to fit in, when you’re born to stand out?
    Oliver James

    The hardest battle you're ever going to fight is the battle to be just you.
    Leo Buscaglia

    Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind.
    Dr. Seuss

    It is not in the stars to hold our destiny but in ourselves.
    William Shakespeare

    Like the sky opens after a rainy day we must open to ourselves.... Learn to love yourself for who you are and open so the world can see you shine.
    James Poland

    Do not go where the path may lead, go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson

    When one is pretending the entire body revolts.
    Anaïs Nin

    A wise man never loses anything if he has himself.
    Michel de Montaigne

    The strongest force in the universe is a human being living consistently with his identity.
    Tony Robbins

    Ride the energy of your own unique spirit.
    Gabrielle Roth

    Your reputation is in the hands of others. That's what a reputation is. You can't control that. The only thing you can control is your character.
    Dr. Wayne W. Dyer

    Almost all absurdity of conduct arises from the imitation of those whom we cannot resemble.
    Samuel Johnson

    All the mistakes I make arise from forsaking my own station and trying to see the object from another person's point of view.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson

    At bottom every man knows well enough that he is a unique being, only once on this earth; and by no extraordinary chance will such a marvelously picturesque piece of diversity in unity as he is, ever be put together a second time.
    Friedrich Nietzsche

    Never be bullied into silence. Never allow yourself to be made a victim. Accept no one's definition of your life; define yourself.
    Harvey Fierstein

    How many cares one loses when one decides not to be something but to be someone.
    Coco Chanel

    Do you want to be a power in the world? Then be yourself.
    Fortune Cookie

    All the knowledge I possess everyone else can acquire, but my heart is all my own.
    Johann von Goethe

    About all you can do in life is be who you are. Some people will love you for you.
    Most will love you for what you can do for them, and some won’t like you at all.
    Rita Mae Brown

    We are so accustomed to disguise ourselves to others that in the end we become disguised to ourselves.
    François Duc de La Rochefoucauld

    It takes courage to grow up and become who you really are.
    E. E. Cummings

    I think of life itself now as a wonderful play that I've written for myself, and so my purpose is to have the utmost fun playing my part.
    Shirley MacLaine

    All my life I had been looking for something, and everywhere I turned someone tried to tell me what it was. I accepted their answers too, though they were often in contradiction and even self-contradictory. I was naïve. I was looking for myself and asking everyone except myself questions, which I, and only I, could answer. It took me a long time and much painful boomeranging of my expectations to achieve a realization everyone else appears to have been born with: that I am nobody but myself.
    Ralph Ellison

    Often people attempt to live their lives backwards; they try to have more things, or more money, in order to do more of what they want, so they will be happier. The way it actually works is the reverse. You must first be who you really are, then do what you need to do, in order to have what you want.
    Margaret Young

    Don’t you ever let a soul in the world tell you that you cant be exactly who you are.
    Lady Gaga

    Know thyself.
    Thales

    To be nobody but yourself in a world which is doing its best, night and day, to make you everybody else means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight; and never stop fighting.
    E. E. Cummings

    If I didn't define myself for myself, I would be crunched into other people's fantasies for me and eaten alive.
    Audre Lorde

    Your time is limited so don't waste it living someone else's life.
    Steve Jobs

    Learn to... be what you are, and learn to resign with a good grace all that you are not.
    Henri Frederic Amiel

    Your work is to discover your world and then with all your heart give yourself to it.
    Buddha

    God has given you one face, and you make yourself another.
    William Shakespeare
    It is not only fine feathers that make fine birds.
    Aesop

    Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation.
    Oscar Wilde

    Every time you don't follow your inner guidance, you feel a loss of energy, loss of power, a sense of spiritual deadness.
    Shakti Gawain

    No creature is fully itself till it is, like the dandelion, opened in the bloom of pure relationship to the sun, the entire living cosmos.
    D.H. Lawrence

    The most exhausting thing in life is being insincere.
    Anne Morrow Lindbergh

    He who trims himself to suit everyone will soon whittle himself away.
    Raymond Hull

    Once conform, once do what others do because they do it, and a kind of lethargy steals over all the finer senses of the soul.
    Michel Eyquem de Montaigne

    Let the world know you as you are, not as you think you should be, because sooner or later, if you are posing, you will forget the pose, and then where are you?
    Fanny Brice

    Live your life as an exclamation, not an explanation.
    Unknown

    Nothing great has ever been achieved except by those who dared believe something inside them was superior to circumstances.
    Bruce Barton

    We are betrayed by what is false within.
    George Meredith

    The great majority of us are required to live a life of constant duplicity. Your health is bound to be affected if, day after day, you say the opposite of what you feel, if you grovel before what you dislike, and rejoice at what brings you nothing but misfortune.
    Boris Pasternak

    One must know oneself. If this does not serve to discover truth, it at least serves as a rule of life and there is nothing better.
    Blaise Pascal

    Is it sufficient that you have learned to drive the car, or shall you look and see what is under the hood? Most people go through life without ever knowing.
    June Singer

    If God had wanted me otherwise, He would have created me otherwise.
    Johann von Goethe

    You were born an original. Don't die a copy.
    John Mason

    It is better to be hated for what you are than to be loved for something you are not. Andre Gide

    Live the life you have imagined.
    Henry David Thoreau


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    Eating Disorders News and Views: April 24, 2012


















    The following News and Views presented do not necessarily reflect the opinion or beliefs of Weighing The Facts.
    Warning: Some articles may be triggering.

    Internet Crackdown on Pro-anorexia Sites

    Two years ago, when Madeleine Bowman began treatment for anorexia, she stopped looking at a pro-anorexia website that for years had served as her community and her source for ideas to nurture her secret illness.

    But on Tuesday she was curious and decided to take a look. Fortunately, her login had expired.

    Bowman 26, of New York, is in recovery from a decade-long battle with anorexia, she said.

    She'd stumbled upon the website in eighth grade, after googling "eating disorders." Bowman had been skipping meals to lose weight and she wanted to find out if she was anorexic. She then visited the site often to find new ways to hide her condition from friends and family.

    Given the many social aggregators that spread information to wider and wider audiences, Bowman says that today it would be even easier for someone to find their way to a pro-anorexia site.

    That might not be the case for much longer.
    Read Internet Crackdown in full.


    Self-Harm Banned by Instagram

    Instagram, the popular online photo-sharing service that was recently bought by Facebook for US$1 billion, is banning images and accounts that condone "self-harm" behavior such as eating disorders, cutting oneself, or committing suicide.

    In a blog post Friday, the company said the following:

    Going forward, we won't allow accounts, images, or hashtags dedicated to glorifying, promoting, or encouraging self-harm. Should users come across content of that nature, we recommend flagging the photo or flagging the user as a "Terms of Service" violation for our Support team to review.

    It is important to note that this guideline does not extend to accounts created to constructively discuss, or document personal experiences that show any form of self-harm where the intention is recovery or open discussion. While we strongly encourage people to seek help for themselves or loved ones who are suffering, we understand the importance of communication as a form of support, in order to create awareness and to assist in recovery.
    Read Banned in full.


    Family of Padiham victim (17) warn other families of signs of anorexia

    THE family of a talented and caring Padiham teenager who died battling anorexia have called for more to be done to raise awareness and help youngsters with the disease.

    Charlotte Rose Seddon (17), a straight A student, died suddenly at home in Balliol Close 12 days after leaving the Priory, Altrincham, following four months of treatment. She weighed just 6st.

    An inquest into her death at Burnley Coroner’s Court heard Charlotte’s heart failed after becoming small due to a lack of nutrients.

    Pathologist Dr Jane Edwards, who carried out the post-mortem examination, said there would have been no symptoms or warning, despite Charlotte having regular health checks.
    Read Warn Other Families in full.


    K 06 Other Specified Feeding or Eating Disorder

    Feeding and Eating Conditions Not Elsewhere Classified

    These Conditions should be considered only if the individual has a feeding or eating disturbance judged to be of clinical significance that does not meet the criteria for any of the Feeding and Eating Disorders described above. The Conditions are described briefly; detailed criteria are not provided pending additional research. Although a diagnostic hierarchy (“trumping”) is not explicitly described, only a single condition should be assigned to an individual reflecting the description that best fits the individual's symptoms.

    Sufficient data are not available at present to justify designating these Conditions’ as Disorders. However, these Conditions may be associated with levels of distress and/or impairment similar to those associated with the recognized Feeding and Eating Disorders, and may require intensive clinical intervention.
    Read Other Specified in full.


    Study: 16 Percent Increase in Men with Eating Disorders

    New data from the NHS shows a shocking rise in the number of men with eating disorders (ED’s). Over the last year, there has been a 16% increase in the number of men and boys admitted to the hospital for eating disorders. While this is a huge jump, it may only hint at the true number of men suffering from an ED.

    By its very nature, disordered eating is a secretive and guilty practice. Sufferers develop an unhealthy relationship with food over time and often go to great lengths to hide the symptoms of their condition. In particular, men have a difficult time admitting they have a problem because of the stigma that still surrounds eating disorders. Conditions such as anorexia and bulimia are often seen as a women’s disease and may be labeled “unmanly”.
    Read 16% Increase in full. 


    Image is everything: Unfortunately, that's the case in our society

    Half the girls in this country between the ages of 11 and 13 believe they are fat.

    That startling statistic comes from The Renfrew Center Foundation for Eating Disorders in Philadelphia and echoes what others say about the way girls think about food and their bodies.

    Some young women go on fad diets or exercise binges at a time in their lives when they should be enjoying childhood and succeeding in school. Instead, they are overly preoccupied with their appearance — or better said, what they think they should look like.
    Read Half The Girls in full.


    Instagram, Pinterest latest to ban 'thinspo,' other 'self-harm' content

    Many online communities have seen issues with "thispo" or "thinspiration" content, promotion anorexia or bulemia, and Instagram, Pintarest, and Tumblr are among services which have responded by banning "self-harm content," with Instagram the latest.

    Blogging service Tumblr made its move in February, saying that while it is ”deeply committed to supporting and defending our users’ freedom of speech, [but] we do draw some limits.”
    Read Latest to Ban in full


    Binge Eating Disorder Continues to Rise Among Men

    About 8 million men and women suffer from Binge Eating Disorder (BED), which is nearly three times the amount of those affected by Anorexia and Bulimia. With as many men affected by BED as women, The Eating Disorder Center of Denver (EDCD) aims to offer a treatment program that is accommodating and effective for both genders.

    A newly recognized condition, those suffering from BED eat more than normal meal portions, feel a loss of control when eating and do not purge after binging.

    Men are traditionally underrepresented in clinical trials for BED that gauge the effectiveness of treatments and are often overlooked when developing treatment programs, according to Dr. Tamara Pryor, EDCD clinical director.
    Read BED Continues to Rise in full.


    Demi Lovato: Bullies Sparked Bulimia

    Demi Lovato's bulimia was sparked by school bullies who branded her 'fat'.

    The 20-year-old former Disney star - who was admitted to rehab in 2010 for help with an eating disorder, self-harm and depression - believes her problems started at the tender age of 12.

    Talking about her tormentors, she said: 'They called me a whore and told me I was fat and ugly. I shouldn't have listened, but I took it to heart and it hurt. I thought maybe I didn't have friends because I was too fat.'
    Read Demi Lovato Bullies in full.


    Anorexia May Be Caused By Brain Abnormality

    London, April 22 (ANI): A new study has suggested that anorexia may be triggered by a defect in the brain, offering new hope that the potentially deadly eating disorder can be treated.

    The pioneering research, carried out on anorexics as young as eight and using powerful new brain-imaging techniques, could lead to different treatments.

    Anorexia is defined as a body weight at least 15 per cent below that expected, the Daily Express reported.

    "We believe subtle problems in early brain development make patients susceptible to anorexia. We need to re-examine other mental health problems," said Psychologist Dr Ian Frampton of Exeter University, one of two researchers leading the study.
    Read Anorexia Brain in full.


    Pro-Anorexia 'Thinspiration' Photos Shouldn't Be Banned from Social Media


    First, they came for the thinspiration pictures.

    Internet censors are always agitating to ban one thing or another, and it's rarely the same thing twice. Instead, there's a revolving carousel of images that are deemed in succession to be beyond even the online pale. Each one seems to present a plausible occasion for, this once, curtailing free speech. The king wearing a pig snout. A swastika. Naked children.

    Right now it's semi-naked women that the distressed classes want to cover up -- the very images on which the entirety of Western visual culture is founded.

    This time, the anxiety about graven images has nothing to do with how they might arouse desire in men. We're afraid of what's known as " thinspiration," it seems, because glamorous photos of very skinny women, together with admiring captions, might arouse self-loathing in women, and thereby inspire self-mortification, and in particular anorexia.
    Read Shouldn't Be Banned in full.


    Scots man reveals his battle with anorexia as number of sufferers rise 

    JONATHAN Hill has a year to start eating or he could die.
    That is the stark warning he was given by doctors trying to help him overcome anorexia.
    And he is an example of a worrying trend, with a rising number of males fighting the disorder which is usually associated with young women.
    Jonathan, 29, has battled an eating disorder since he was 12.
    His weight is currently six and a half stone – he used to be as low as four and a half – and hopes he is doing enough to see his fourth decade.
    “I’ve accepted I’ll always have this illness. I won’t get better,” said Jonathan.
    Read Scots Man in full.

    .

    Recovery Quote Of The Week: March 5, 2012















    Your greatness is revealed not by the lights that shine upon you, but by the light that shines within you.
    Ray Davis


    See sidebar menu for more Recovery Quotes of the Week and Inspirational Recovery Quotes



    picsource:http://www.flickr.com/photos/devastar/3564243244/in/photostream/

    Eating Disorders News and Views: March 3, 2012


















    Senate Recognizes National Eating Disorders Awareness Week
    Surfky

    FRANKFORT, KY (3/1/12) – The Kentucky State Senate has recognized that February 26 through March 3, 2012, as National Eating Disorders Week and honored the National Eating Disorders Association on the floor of the Kentucky State Senate.

    “Eating disorders are a continually growing problem in Kentucky,” said Jerry P. Rhoads, D-Madisonville. “It is important to raise awareness about this issue so that our citizens will achieve a healthier lifestyle.”
    Read Recognizes in full.


    Anorexia on the Rise Among Kids and Anti-Obesity Campaigns Blamed
    MedicalNet

    According to Dr Jane Morris, chairwoman of the Scottish Eating Disorder Interest Group, healthy eating drives are causing anorexia in children. She said children were obsessing about their diet because of drives to combat obesity.

    Last week reports of children as young as six were being treated for anorexia emerged, and figures showed medical treatments were on the rise. Dr Morris, a consultant child and adolescent psychiatrist at the Royal Edinburgh hospital, said it was a ‘huge concern.’
    Read On The Rise in full.


    Anorexia Research Finds Government Intervention Justified
    The Guardian

    Governments are justified in using the law to prevent modelling agencies from using very skinny women on catwalks and stop magazines from printing adverts and photographs that suggest extreme thinness is attractive, according to research from the LSE.
    The first-ever economic analysis of anorexia, studying nearly 3,000 young women in the UK and the rest of Europe, found that the social and cultural environment influences decisions by young women to starve themselves in search of what they perceive to be an ideal body shape.
    Young women, who make up 90% of anorexia nervosa cases, are influenced by the size and weight of their peer group.
    Anorexia, say the researchers, is a socially transmitted disease and appears to be more common in countries such as France, where women are thinner than the European average. It mostly affects girls and women between the ages of 15 and 34, they found, who were willing to trade off their health against self-image.
    Read Justified in full.


    Peer Pressure Drives Spread of Anorexia: Study
    HealthNews

    LONDON (Reuters) - Anorexia is a socially transmitted disorder and appears to be more prevalent in countries such as France where women are thinner than average, according to new research from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).
    The "economic analysis" of anorexia, using a sample of nearly 3,000 young women across Europe, concluded that peer group pressure is one of the most significant influences on self-image and the development of anorexia and appeared just as the autumn/winter season is winding up with Paris Fashion Week.
    The research by LSE economist Dr Joan Costa-Font and Professor Mireia Jofre-Bonet of City University, showed that it is becoming increasingly apparent that standards of physical appearance are important and powerful motivators of human behavior, especially regarding health and food.
    Read Peer Pressure in full.


    Research Fail: New Anorexia Study Focuses On Weight, Not Behavior
    Blisstree

    Anorexia is widely seen as a disease of isolation and loneliness–but according to a new study, it could be a “socially transmitted disease,” passed from one skinny woman to another. Researchers in London have found that body image and weight are greatly impacted by the behaviors, attitudes, and even weights our peers, which is all well and good. Unfortunately, the study has one gigantic flaw that makes it difficult to take seriously: the definition for who is “anorexic” seems to be based solely on weight, not behavior. Which may be how they do it in the DSM, but that doesn’t mean it’s accurate.

    Reuters reports that the researchers used a sampling of 2,871 women ranging in age from 15 to 34. The participants reported their age, gender (even though they were all female), marital status, weight, eating habits, political attitudes, education level, and body image perception.
     Read Research Fail in full.


    Binge Eating is Common Yet Misunderstood
    NewsWorks

    It's the most common eating disorder, but it often goes undiagnosed or is misdiagnosed. Participants in this week's Binge Eating Disorder conference in Philadelphia want to change that.

    Binge eating disorder can easily look like obesity since people who have it tend to be overweight. But it goes far beyond food choices and exercise. Binge eating is triggered by deep psychological distress and eating offers relief -- albeit short-lived.

    Chevese Turner said she felt extremely depressed and upset after an eating binge, yet felt unable to stop this behavior which started early on in her life.

    Turner was an overweight child experiencing trauma at home and at school, and food became a momentary escape. She said she was able to break the vicious cycle and get better once she understood what she was dealing with, and found a therapist specializing in this disorder
    Read Misunderstood in full.


    Eating Disorders Quietly Plague Black Communities
    The Grio

    Although white women were once thought to be the sole group battling eating disorders, over the past few years, reports of eating disorders among minorities -- particularly African-Americans -- have increased.

    Stephanie Covington Armstrong, an African-American woman, shares her struggles with bulimia with theGrio.

    Raised in Brooklyn, NY, Covington said she grew up poor and dealt with a series of issues that impacted her childhood, including poor eating habits, low self-esteem, and rape. She believes these traumas led to her eating disorder.

    "I started thinking that something was wrong with me... that I wasn't lovable... and that I was damaged," she said. "So the way that I was able to kind of calm those fears was with food. My eating would push down all of those fears, and my eating disorder pushed over the edge."

    Covington emphasized that the eating disorder gradually took over her entire life.
    Read Quietly Plague in full


    Weight History May Be Vital to Bulimia Treatment
    PsychCentral

    In a new study, researchers discovered a majority of women with bulimia nervosa reach their highest-ever body weight after developing their eating disorder — even though bulimia is characterized overall by significant weight loss.

    The study concludes that exploring a woman’s weight history and the course of the eating disorder will improve productive discussion of weight and weight history, and thus improve treatments.
    Read May Be Vital in full.


    Anorexia Loved Me: Victim of Officer's Sex Abuse
    smh.com.au

    "Anorexia became my friend, it loved me"
    "I could not come to terms with what he did to me"
    "I have learnt that no one is above the law"
    "I now have the power and no one can take that away from me"

    A young woman has spoken of her battle with anorexia and depression, which left her "an inch away from death" following the sexual abuse inflicted upon her as a child by a NSW police officer.

    The woman fought back tears as she delivered an extended victim impact statement in the sentencing of former Senior Constable Gregory Ernest Urch, 61, who sexually assaulted her and another minor during the mid-1990s.
    Read Loved Me in full.


    Is Anorexia A Female Disease? Think Again
    FairfieldMirror

    What do Nicole Richie, Lindsay Lohan, Billy Bob Thorton and Elvis Presley have in common? They have all suffered from eating disorders.

    While eating disorders in females are often identified, male celebrities are not publicized as much but they too have fallen victim to the same disease.

    In 2008, a student was diagnosed with an eating disorder after witnessing many female schoolmates obsessing over how “fat” they were. Currently receiving treatment four years later at age 14, Avi Sinai is one of many males who have suffered from anorexia nervosa.

    According to the National Eating Disorders Association, anorexia nervosa is a “life-threatening eating disorder”, but sex or gender is not mentioned.

    Compared to women, men tend to be more secretive about anorexia due to cultural and social expectations within their own society. Thinness amongst women is advertised within the media, allowing them to battle with weight issues without it being socially unacceptable.
    Read Think Again in full. 


    Binge Eating: Patients Struggle to Break Free When Food Takes Control
    USA Today

    Peterson had been struggling with binge-eating disorder since the mid-'90s, from the time she was just 11. By late 2009, she carried more than 200 pounds on her 5-foot-2-inch frame.

    "I was feeling miserable," said Peterson, who works in retail. "I couldn't walk across the parking lot, couldn't run, my back hurt. I felt like my customers thought I was stupid and were judging me."

    But her vision kicked her into action, inspiring her to seek help to control her binges and lose weight.

    "I lost it, because if I didn't, the binge-eating disorder would have killed me," said Peterson, 29, and more than 70 pounds lighter.
    Read Struggle in full.


    Anorexia Sees No Age, Color, or Gender
    DailyRx

    Many people believe that anorexia and bulimia are disorders most apparent amongst white teenage girls, yet a recent report demonstrates that they’re increasingly affecting minorities, children, and boys.

    David Rosen, M.D, M.P.H. professor of pediatrics at University of Michigan Medical School, is the author of a new clinical report entitled "Identification and Management of Eating Disorders in Children and Adolescents".

    He explains, “the epidemiology of eating disorders has gradually changed.”

    He calls upon his fellow pediatricians to “be familiar with early detection and appropriate management of these disorders.”
    Read Anorexia Sees No in full.



    Eating Disorders Consume the Lives of the Affected
    Iowa State Daily

    Most people are familiar with the two main types of eating disorders: anorexia and bulimia. Anorexia involves limiting the amount of food one eats while bulimia involves ridding oneself of the eaten food through purging or excessive exercise.

    With this week being National Eating Disorder Awareness Week, it is the perfect time for people to become educated about what eating disorders are, who they affect and where to get help.

    Eunice Bassler, senior lecturer of food science and human nutrition, explained a common misconception about eating disorders. “Eating disorders are disordered eating patterns with a psychological component.”

    Bassler most often deals with disordered eating patterns, which are simply irregular eating patterns. These do not get classified as eating disorders until a psychological condition, such as a distorted view of the body or a fear of gaining weight, is identified along with the disordered eating pattern.
    Read Consume in full.


    Five Warning Signs of Eating Disorders in Your Teen
    TimesUnion

    To help attract attention to National Eating Disorders Week (February 26-March 3, 2012), eating disorders and food addictions expert Tennie McCarty offers tips to parents on how to spot eating disorders in their teen children.

    “Over the years, most of the talk about eating disorders in teens has focused on anorexia and bulimia, typically blamed on unrealistic body images portrayed in the media. Increasingly however, the discussion has turned to the opposite end of the spectrum - compulsive overeating and food addiction. As the obesity rates in American children continue to skyrocket, teen overeating and addiction to food are becoming serious concerns to many parents,” said McCarty.
    Read 5 Warning Signs in full.


    Why You Should Care That New Eating Disorders Might Make The DSM-V
    BlissTree

    When most people hear ‘eating disorder,’ they think anorexia or bulimia. But there are lots of different types of disordered eating—binge eating, compulsive night eating, obsessively health-conscious eating—and psychiatrists may officially recognize several ‘new’ eating disorders in the upcoming Diagnostic and Statistic manual. The DSM guides the way psychiatrists diagnose and treat mental health patients, how insurance companies cover treatment, what researchers get grants for studying and the drugs pharmaceutical companies develop. I asked Dr. Janet Taylor, a clinical psychiatry instructor at Columbia University’s Harlem Hospital, about the DSM, new eating disorders and what these mean for mental health care.
    What is the DSM-V?
    Read Why You Should Care in full.


    May Institute: What Women Over 40 Should Know About Eating Disorders
    Wicked Local

    It’s not just teenage girls who are willing to starve themselves or “binge and purge” in order to become as thin as the movie stars and fashion models they admire. Today, more and more women in their 40s, 50s, and 60s are seeking help for eating disorders they have developed as they battle slowing metabolisms and thickening waistlines.

    "A growing number of older women are developing eating disorders or have hidden them for years," confirms Lauren Solotar, Ph.D., ABPP, May Institute’s Chief Executive Officer and a clinical psychologist who has specialized in the treatment of eating and anxiety disorders.
    Read Women Over 40 in full.


    Drawing on Experience to Tell Their Eating Disorder Stories
    Derby Telegraph

    The idea was developed through users of the charity who found it difficult to express how they felt with words.
    Lauren Hind, 20, has been using the First Steps programme for the past four years and now volunteers with the organisation.
    Her creation involves a picture of her face and words, such as "fat" and "worthless", describing how she has felt.
    She said: "When we first had the workshops, I got really angry because I couldn't draw.
    "But then the teacher told me that art didn't have to be drawings, it could be words too. Then I came up with my piece. It doesn't have a name. It's all my thoughts and feelings that I've ever had but couldn't say."
    Lauren, who lives in Sinfin, used to binge-eat and said she had avoided getting help sooner because she was afraid of being turned away.
    Read Drawing On Experience in full.



    Healthy Eating Campaigns ‘Causing Anorexia’
    Deadline News

    A SCOTS expert has said government healthy eating drives are causing anorexia in children.

    Dr Jane Morris, chairwoman of the Scottish Eating Disorder Interest Group, said children were obsessing about their diet because of drives to combat obesity.
    Last week reports of children as young as six were being treated for anorexia emerged, and figures showed medical treatments were on the rise.
    Dr Morris, a consultant child and adolescent psychiatrist at the Royal Edinburgh hospital, said it was a ‘huge concern.’
    Read Causing Anorexia in full.


    Anorexia and Aging: Is There a Silent Crisis of Eating Disorders in Older Women?

    Family Goes Strong

    Expert: "Eating disorders are the deadliest mental illnesses and premature death is very common."

    It's National Eating Disorders Awareness Week from Feb. 26 – March 3. There is a lot of helpful information available on how younger and younger kids are struggling with eating disorders, how 5-year-old girls are complaining they are "fat," and how boys are now struggling in significant numbers with one of the deadliest mental illnesses there is.
    Read Anorexia and Aging in full.

    Eating Disorders Awareness: Pro-Recovery Project
















    Last week I had the pleasure of participating in a Pro-Recovery Project with 11 other bloggers to help raise awareness about Eating Disorders. Each blogger shared their views on, and reasons for, recovery.

    Check out their inspiring posts:

    Together We Can Recover

    A Piece Of Me

    Until Eating Disorders Are No More

    Be Inspired

    Life After Anorexia

    Lost In Translation

    Just As I Am

    Fighting Anorexia

    Actively Arielle: A Voice With A Commitment

    A Pensive Insight

    Creating A Path To Wellness

    Weighing The Facts


    Recovery Is Possible!

    Eating Disorders Awareness Week 2012: Choosing Recovery

















    It's the first day of National Eating Disorders Awareness Week, 2012.
    Let's talk about RECOVERY...


    What is an Eating Disorder?

    eating disorder
    Function: noun
    : any of several psychological disorders (as anorexia nervosa or bulimia) characterized by serious disturbances of eating behavior

    Eating disorders involve extreme behaviors, attitudes, and feelings surrounding food, weight, and body image which are harmful to a person's health and well-being.

    Eating disorders are dangerous and can be fatal.

    Though someone may be suffering from one eating disorder, they may also exhibit behaviors /traits of other eating disorders (or trade one eating disorder for another).
    Eating Disorders Symptoms
    Do I have an eating disorder? (self-assessment tests)


    Is Recovery Possible?

    Many, many people have recovered from their eating disorder and gone on to live healthily and happily. It takes time. It's a process. You can expect to experience ups and downs along the way but it is definitely possible.


    What defines Recovery from an Eating Disorder?

    Opinions vary, both medically and individually, but my favorite description of recovery is found in the book 8 Keys to Recovery from an Eating Disorder: Effective Strategies from Therapeutic Practice and Personal Experience by Carolyn Costin and Gwen Schubert Grabb. It says;
    Being recovered is when the person can accept his or her natural body size and shape and no longer has a self-destructive relationship with food or exercise. When you are recovered, food and weight take a proper perspective in your life, and what you weigh is not more important than who you are; in fact, actual numbers are of little or no importance at all. When recovered, you will not compromise your health or betray your soul to look a certain way, wear a certain size, or reach a certain number on the scale. When you are recovered, you do not use eating disorder behaviors to deal with, distract from, or cope with other problems.

     Why would I want to Recover? What are the benefits? 

    The benefits are too many to list in full. Here are just a few:
    • Increased Energy
    • A better sense of self
    • Self-respect
    • Self-acceptance
    • Self-confidence
    • Being more comfortable around others
    • Being more comfortable in your own body
    • Physical and emotional strength
    • Feeling more peaceful
    • Increased passion for life
    • A better appreciation for your body
    • A more comfortable relationship with food
    • Better relationships with family and friends
    • Better physical and emotional health
    • Healthier hair, skin, and nails
    • Longer life expectancy 
    • A more loving relationship with yourself 
    ...and the list goes on and on.


    What steps do I need to take to Recover? 

    The first step is admitting that you have an eating disorder.
    The second step is to decide that you want to recover.
    Step three is to find professional eating disorder treatment.

    There are several options available for professional help in recovering.

    Here are a couple of  resources to help you with deciding your plan of action for recovery:
    Something Fishy
    Help Guide. org


     Check out the non-profit org, Mentor Connect for recovery mentoring. It's free.

    Here is a list of more Eating Disorder Organizations and websites that you can contact for help and info.


    What can I do, in addition to professional eating disorder treatment, to enhance my recovery efforts?
    here are a few suggestions:

    • surround yourself with positive, loving, supportive people
    • journal
    • use positive affirmations each morning, at bedtime, and throughout the day.
    • join a support group
    • visit positive recovery forums and sites
    • take time for yourself
    • be forgiving, kind, and loving to yourself
    • be patient
    • take a step back, and rethink before reacting
    • make a relapse prevention plan
    • take care of yourself
    • nurture your mind, your body, and your spirit, daily
    • volunteer/help others

     I asked readers three questions about recovery:

    1.What has recovery meant for you?
    2.What are the benefits of recovery?
    3.How did you deal with your emotions when ED was speaking louder than your recovery?

    Here are their amazing and insightful answers:

    A said:
    Recovery for me has been an awakening of my real and authentic self. I lived for so long in the grips of ED and yearning for approval and acceptance from others. I was constantly looking outwards and thought that if I could fix the external aspects of myself, somehow I would be happy. Once I admitted to myself that I needed help and asked for it, I realized that the only way to happiness was to seek within first. 

    The days when ED yelled in my head and tried to break me down, I yelled back and constantly challenged my distorted thoughts. With the help of a wonderful therapist, family, and friends, I began to see that ED was very simple, black-and-white, and that I wasn't any of those things. 

    The benefits of recovery are that I actually accept and like myself just as I am. I am my own best friend instead of my own worst enemy. Most days I can see myself clearly and I am beautiful, inside and outside. Recovery for me is about choosing love and life, and I have never looked back.

    S said:
    I want to be in healthy relationships with those close to me. I want companionship but I also want the capability to live alone. I want to use food as fuel not as an emotional crutch. I want to have a healthy body, regardless of its size. I want to be okay with the resulting size.

    I want to sprint towards life, not away from death. I want to run a marathon and be healthy enough to do so. I want to compete in challenges regardless of fear of failure. I want to chase down every dream and capture them. I want to live.


    L said: Recovery means peace and freedom to me. The benefits are wonderful - no more shouting in my head, able to work, smiling and laughing without the guilt, meeting friends for a cheeky drink or two etc.

    When my ed spoke louder than my recovery I did my best to not respond. It was a struggle to get through the days without giving into it but I wanted to prove it wrong. So I did :)


    B said:
    Recovery means to be me that i will be strong (mentally and physically) and healthy. Recovery will allow me to love myself and my body and accept that i can not be perfect because no one actually is. Recovery shows me everyday that i can do anything.

    The benefit of recovery is that i will be happy and truly learn to love life and myself. I have learned that being a smaller size is not a good thing, and a healthy size is a good thing.

    I've learned to say, "No, I'm not listening to you" or "You already said that." I deal with my emotions by repeating positive quotes or watching a pro-recovery video on youtube. I've found that writing down all the negative comments my ED makes and then counteracting them with positive ones is the best. But, above all, i refuse to restrict and let my ED win me over because I'm stronger than that.

    K said:
      I am not in recovery yet, in all reality I think I'm relapsing, but I still have my hopes and dreams. Recovery means freedom and time. Freedom to think about things. Freedom to act with integrity to myself. Freedom to not hide myself. It will mean all the time I spend obsessing about my disordered behaviours can be spent on the life I want to live.

    One day - this ED won't even be an option for me. I'll face stressful situations with a healthy set of coping skills. At the moment my flirtations with recovery, ED has still been an option. But I want to fight this, I need to fight this, so one day I'll look back at the journey I've taken and know I'll never go back.

    Life with an ED is a half life, a life in the shadows. I want more. I will get there. There isn't an alternative.


    Choose Recovery! When you have an eating disorder, recovery is the most important factor in being able to live a healthy, happier life... to living the life you deserve. Recovery will cause the world to open up wide so that you can experience it completely and enjoy the life you desire for yourself.
    MrsM

    see sidebar menu for more recovery inspiration
     
    ©Weighing The Facts



    resources:
     8 keys to recovery excerpt http://blogs.psychcentral.com/weightless/2011/08/what-full-recovery-from-an-eating-disorder-means/